Eye Tracking Reveals a Crucial Role for Facial Motion in Recognition of Faces by Infants

被引:37
作者
Xiao, Naiqi G. [1 ]
Quinn, Paul C. [2 ]
Liu, Shaoying [3 ]
Ge, Liezhong [3 ]
Pascalis, Olivier [4 ]
Lee, Kang [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Toronto, Dr Eric Jackman Inst Child Study, Toronto, ON M5R 2X2, Canada
[2] Univ Delaware, Dept Psychol & Brain Sci, Newark, DE 19716 USA
[3] Zhejiang Sci Tech Univ, Dept Psychol, Hangzhou, Zhejiang, Peoples R China
[4] Univ Grenoble Alpes, Lyon Neurosci Res Ctr LPNC, Grenoble, France
基金
美国国家卫生研究院; 美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
facial movements; face processing development; infant; eye movement; RECOGNIZING MOVING FACES; DEVELOPMENTAL-CHANGES; YOUNG INFANTS; STATIC FACES; BIOLOGICAL MOTION; RACE FACES; PERCEPTION; EXPRESSIONS; INFORMATION; MOVEMENTS;
D O I
10.1037/dev0000019
中图分类号
B844 [发展心理学(人类心理学)];
学科分类号
040202 ;
摘要
Current knowledge about face processing in infancy comes largely from studies using static face stimuli, but faces that infants see in the real world are mostly moving ones. To bridge this gap, 3-, 6-, and 9-month-old Asian infants (N = 118) were familiarized with either moving or static Asian female faces, and then their face recognition was tested with static face images. Eye-tracking methodology was used to record eye movements during the familiarization and test phases. The results showed a developmental change in eye movement patterns, but only for the moving faces. In addition, the more infants shifted their fixations across facial regions, the better their face recognition was, but only for the moving faces. The results suggest that facial movement influences the way faces are encoded from early in development.
引用
收藏
页码:744 / 757
页数:14
相关论文
共 74 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 2011 IEEE INT C AUT
[2]   Attention and memory for faces and actions in infancy: The salience of actions over faces in dynamic events [J].
Bahrick, LE ;
Gogate, LJ ;
Ruiz, I .
CHILD DEVELOPMENT, 2002, 73 (06) :1629-1643
[3]   Infant discrimination of faces in naturalistic events: Actions are more salient than faces [J].
Bahrick, Lorraine E. ;
Newell, Lisa C. .
DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2008, 44 (04) :983-996
[4]   The Development of Face Perception in Infancy: Intersensory Interference and Unimodal Visual Facilitation [J].
Bahrick, Lorraine E. ;
Lickliter, Robert ;
Castellanos, Irina .
DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2013, 49 (10) :1919-1930
[5]   Automatic Decoding of Facial Movements Reveals Deceptive Pain Expressions [J].
Bartlett, Marian Stewart ;
Littlewort, Gwen C. ;
Frank, Mark G. ;
Lee, Kang .
CURRENT BIOLOGY, 2014, 24 (07) :738-743
[6]   Face processing in infancy: Developmental changes in the use of different kinds of relational information [J].
Bhatt, RS ;
Bertin, E ;
Hayden, A ;
Reed, A .
CHILD DEVELOPMENT, 2005, 76 (01) :169-181
[7]   Culture Shapes How We Look at Faces [J].
Blais, Caroline ;
Jack, Rachael E. ;
Scheepers, Christoph ;
Fiset, Daniel ;
Caldara, Roberto .
PLOS ONE, 2008, 3 (08)
[8]   Perception of Object-Context Relations: Eye-Movement Analyses in Infants and Adults [J].
Bornstein, Marc H. ;
Mash, Clay ;
Arterberry, Martha E. .
DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2011, 47 (02) :364-375
[9]   The role of rigid motion in newborns' face recognition [J].
Bulf, Hermann ;
Turati, Chiara .
VISUAL COGNITION, 2010, 18 (04) :504-512
[10]   The effect of motion at encoding and retrieval for same- and other-race face recognition [J].
Butcher, Natalie ;
Lander, Karen ;
Fang, Hui ;
Costen, Nick .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 2011, 102 :931-942